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DEFENCES

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Self Defence The Criminal Code permits you to defend yourself, those under your protection, your movable property, and your dwelling and real property. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DEFENCES


1
DEFENCES
  • Law 120

2
Defences
  • Various defences are used to prove that the
    accused is not guilty of the offence charged or
    guilty of a lesser offence. The best possible
    defence is an alibi, a defence that places the
    accused somewhere else at the time the offence
    occurred. It is important that the accused
    disclose any alibi to the Crown at the earliest
    opportunity. Failing to do so may erode the
    credibility of both the accused and the alibi.

3
Self Defence
  • The Criminal Code permits you to defend yourself,
    those under your protection, your movable
    property, and your dwelling and real property.
    However, you can only use force that is
    necessary and reasonable according to the
    circumstances.
  • The Criminal Code allows you to stop a thief from
    taking your personal property or to take it back,
    as long as you do not strike the thief or cause
    bodily harm. You can do more to defend your
    dwelling. Under section 40, you are justified
    in using as much force as is necessary to prevent
    any person from forcibly breaking into or
    forcibly entering your dwelling-house without
    lawful authority.

4
Legal Duty
  • Legal Duty allows certain people to commit acts
    that would otherwise be offences. For example, a
    police officer can drive above the speed limit
    when chasing a suspected criminal. In recent
    years, however, several innocent bystanders have
    been killed in police chases. An officer may
    also use as much force as necessary to make an
    arrest. Section 43 of the Criminal Code is very
    controversial because it allows a parent,
    schoolteacher, or person standing in place of a
    parent to use reasonable force to correct a
    child.

5
Excusable Consent
  • Provocation may be used as a partial defence for
    a charge of murder. Excusable conduct also
    includes duress, which is a threat or use of
    violence. In R. v. Morgentaler (1988) the
    Supreme Court stated that the defence would be
    successful only in urgent situations of clear
    and imminent peril where compliance with the law
    is demonstrably impossible.
  • Honest mistake may also be accepted as a defence
    under excusable conduct. It means the offender
    truthfully did not know he or she had committed a
    crime. This defence is most commonly used by
    people who are found in possession of unpaid
    items while shopping. The onus is on the Crown
    to prove that the person accused of shoplifting
    did it intentionally. The accuseds credibility
    will largely determine whether this defence
    succeeds.

6
Mental Disorder
  • The use of mental disorder as a defence has been
    debated by members of the legal profession for
    many years. The terms mental disorder and
    unfit to stand trial are defined in the
    Criminal Code as follows
  • mental disorder ? means disease of the mind
  • unfit to stand trial ? means unable on account of
    mental disorder to conduct a defence at any stage
    of the proceedings before a verdict is rendered
    or to instruct counsel to do so, and, in
    particular, unable on account of mental disorder
    to
  • understand the nature of the proceedings
  • understand the possible consequences of the
    proceedings
  • communicate with counsel

7
Mental Fitness to Stand Trial
  • An accused can be remanded for up to 60 days to
    evaluate his or her fitness to stand trial. This
    may include an assessment of his or her mental
    status at the time of the offence. A provincial
    or territorial review board determines if the
    accused is fit to stand trial the accused is
    sent back to court. If he or she is fit to stand
    trial, the case is heard. Usually, evidence
    given during a court-ordered psychiatric
    assessment is not admitted without the accuseds
    consent.
  • If the accused is unfit, the court can order
    treatment to make him or her fit to stand trial.
    An inquiry is held every two years, until the
    accused is tried, to make sure there is still
    enough evidence to bring him or her to trial.

8
Mental Fitness at the Time of the Offence
  • There is a presumption of sanity, just as there
    is a presumption of innocence. The Supreme Court
    has ruled that the Crown may not introduce
    evidence of mental disorder unless it had already
    proved actus reus and mens rea in a case. The
    defence can independently decide whether to
    introduce the defence of mental disorder.
  • If the accused is found not guilty by reason of
    insanity, the verdict must state that the
    accused committed the act or omission but is not
    criminally responsible on account of mental
    disorder. The court then holds a hearing to
    determine what to do with the accused, or the
    review board determines the future of the
    offender.

9
Mental Fitness at the Time of the Offence
  • The Court and the review board must protect the
    public. They consider the mental condition of
    the accused, the reintegration of the accused
    into society, and other needs of the accused.
    The mental state of the accused at the time of
    the hearing, not at the time of the offence, is
    the main concern. If considered not to be a
    threat, the accused may be discharged absolutely.
    Otherwise, the discharge will have conditions,
    or the accused will be held in custody in a
    hospital. Treatment, however, must not be a
    condition of release.

10
Necessity
  • The defence of necessity means that the accused
    had no reasonable alternative to committing an
    illegal act. For example, Luke severs his hand
    with a band saw. Bo puts the hand on ice and
    drives Luke to the hospital running a red light
    on the way. After Luke is taken into emergency,
    a police officer hands Bo a summons for dangerous
    operation of a motor vehicle. Bo uses the
    defence of necessity because he believed his
    conduct was absolutely necessary to keep Luke
    from bleeding to death.
  • For the defence of necessity to succeed, all of
    the following conditions must be met
  • the accused must show that the act was done to
    avoid a greater harm
  • there was no reasonable opportunity for an
    alternative course of action that did not involve
    a breach of the law.
  • the harm inflicted must be less than the harm
    avoided.

11
Intoxication
  • It is important to remember how specific and
    general intent offences work to understand the
    intoxication defence. A general intent offence
    is on in which the intent relates solely to
    committing the act (Fred hits Barney out of
    anger). If Fred hit Barney with the intent to
    kill he has committed aggravated assault and is a
    specific intent offence.
  • Any intoxicated person who was unable to form
    intent before striking someone cannot be found
    guilty of aggravated assault. He or she can,
    however, be found guilty of assault, a general
    intent offence. All that needs to be proved is
    that the intoxicated person did strike someone.
    Similarly, a person charged with murder can use
    the defence of intoxication. If successful, this
    will lower the conviction of murder (a specific
    intent offence) to manslaughter (a general intent
    offence).
  • There are situations where self-induced
    intoxication is not a defence to a criminal act.

12
Automatism
  • Automatism has been described as unconscious,
    involuntary behaviour the state of the person
    who, though capable of action, is not conscious
    of what he is doing. Sleepwalking, convulsions,
    and behaviour caused by psychological stress are
    some examples. To be acquitted on this defence,
    the accused must prove that he or she was in a
    state of automatism when committing the offence.
  • Automatism caused by a disease of the mind is
    called insane automatism. Here the source of
    the malfunction is rooted in the psychological or
    emotional makeup of the person. If this state is
    proved, the accused is entitled to a verdict of
    not criminally responsible on account of a
    mental disorder. The offender would then be
    subject to the procedures outlined under mental
    disorder.

13
Consent
  • Consent can be used as a valid defence, but only
    if the party injured by the accused could and did
    consent to the action. For example, many hockey
    and football players have been accused of
    assaulting opponents during a game. The defence
    usually is that by playing the game, the injured
    party consented, or agreed to the games rough
    physical contact.
  • The defence of consent can never be used in cases
    involving firearms, murder or for various sexual
    offences committed under the age of 14.

14
Entrapment
  • Entrapment is a police action that encourages or
    aids a person to commit an offence. It is not
    recognized as a defence, but rather as an abuse
    by the police. A judge who finds that entrapment
    has occurred should stay the proceedings.

15
Mistake of Fact
  • Ignorance of the law is generally not accepted as
    a defence. Ignorance of the facts, however, will
    be accepted as a defence, but only under two
    conditions
  • The mistake was genuine and not the result of the
    accused neglecting to find out the facts.
  • The law accepts ignorance of the facts as a
    defence.

16
Mistake of Fact
  • For example, you receive counterfeit money while
    shopping. When you try to pay a bill with it,
    you are arrested. You cannot be considered
    negligent for not finding out that the money was
    counterfeit people do not usually check every
    bill they receive. In another example, you buy a
    used bicycle that was advertised in a bulletin
    board notice. Later, you are arrested under the
    Criminal Code, which states that it is an offence
    to knowingly possess stolen goods. If you can
    prove that you did not know the goods were
    stolen, then your mistake-of-fact defence will
    succeed.

17
Double Jeopardy
  • Double jeopardy means to be tried twice for the
    same offence. Under section 11 of the Charter,
    it is prohibited Any person charged with an
    offence has the rightif finally acquitted of the
    offence, not to be tried for it again and, if
    finally found guilty and punished for the
    offence, not to be tried or punished for it
    again.
  • In a case of double jeopardy, a pre-trial motion
    can be made using one of two pleas
  • In a plea of autrefois acquit, the accused states
    that he or she has already been acquitted of the
    charge.
  • In a plea of autrefois convict, the accused
    states that he or she has already been convicted
    on the charge. 
  • The judge then investigates the matter and rules
    on whether the current charge is based on the
    same facts as the previous charge that was tried.
    If so, the judge will dismiss the case.
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